M RUTH NEAR TO 1 WORLDRECORD l New York Slugger Is Only Few v Points Behind George Sis- ler of St. Louis fcuPV CHICAGO, July 10 With n now flrEl world's record within his grasp, 1 Babe" Km Ruth, the New York slugger, today 9flH is driving towards the hatting eham- EH plonshlp of the American League. H Reposing in fourth place a week ago. SH the homcrnn kip if now second In the fHH list of bittern with an average of pH 3S6. thirtv three points behind Geo. EH Sleler, the St. I.ajul8 star, who Is lead- HM Inp the league Kuih passed rhe vetei- rH on Tris Speak r of Cleveland, and Joe tM Jack on ,.f Ch:.-..go. who are tied for H the third place honors, with .38 , Sis- ler. In first place. Ifl hatting .4 19. gHl Ruth connected with thirteen hits ITVv in nine games In addition he pulled nva from Speaker for .'coring honors iio has crossed the plate seventy times. while the Clevelander is two runs be- tBB Bice, of Washington, continued to PWT bum the paths and Is far out in front imtfm among the Imse stealers with 35 thefts. Vfl Other leading batten art Weaver. fKfl Chicago .365; Rice. Washington. .35 1, HI Milam 'Washington, .346; Johnson Cleveland. .341. E. Collins. Chicago. BMW 340; iicndryx, Boston. 33$; Felsch.i '.4tl ( m Chicago. 33 3. I hUf . HORNS!? DETHRONED. ' 1 1 j , yn, of Bos m, p outfielder. mM and "pinch htttei dethroned Rogei 1 si i 1 1 1 1 t!o y i , ague batti i - ho ha ve pai tlclpated " in fortv or more game'. I!e Is baiting' 103 for 4? games, in which he cracked' if ,,ut "0 hits In 2 times at bat. Horns- J bv, however, is the real leader among . M the regulars, with a mark of 878.mad in 73 games. Hollochoi of Chicago, .ijjt had tied th Si Louts star a b run JH getter, having crossed the plate fifty H Cv Williams, of Philadelphia de- H Uvered his weekly homerun nnd is l aJ-j 'sH tug In circuit drlyes with nine Max -H Carey, the Pittsburgh outfielder, stole three more bases and is far In front TM of the base stealers, with -8 thefts OTHER (.ooi) HITTI RS. fcH Other leading batters: B. Smith New York. .366; Konetchy. Brooklyn. .333; Nicholson, Pittsburgh. .326. Roush, H Cincinnati 126; Williams, nuaaeipnia H .3'l; Hollocher. Chicago, .821; Lau- H bert, Cincinnati. .821; Ciroh. Cincinnati, a .31 s ; Young. New York. .316. Robert- H eon Chicago. .31".. IIH Bi n Tlhcup, the Indian pitcher, with K Louisville, Is so firmly entrenched In the batting leadership of the American BHMggR association that all attempts to dls- xPHKI lodge him have beon unavailing. He i Is sotting the pace with an average of B. 1 Rapp of St. Paul, went Into a tie Wm v. i i h 1 M i -sen . (" hon- m mm nr- In base stealing, i h having 26 Y Sunn Brief of Kansas City, nosed i ahead of Ha v. r - i 'ani. in home : run hitting, having a total of nine 4' The Paul slUggi t has i Ighl 1 i hi i H leading batters: Hartley. Columbus. H .359; Wickland, Toledo. .357; Rapp. St H Paul. 331. Wade. Minneapolis, .126; H Sweeney, Kansas City. .323; Magce. Vj Columbus. .222; Goon, Kan.u City, H .321, Rondeau, Minneapolis, .320, B Kutler Milwaukee, .320; Dressen. St Paul. IN WESTERN id AGUE. HH Bogurt of Joplin. regained the bat- B ting championship of the Western L a- H cue passing Carl East, the Wichita PH pitcher, llogart has an average of .377, jlV while East la one point behind. Berk 3f of Wichita, broke the tie for honors H in home run hitting, increasing his gLa total to 14 Varyan, his team mate, SHS has thirtren Jl '. Lee of ( imaha, the leading base SI stealer, is being pressed by Pitt of ! ! !i. , i V. , - 1 1 ' iv-1 i if flsll I'I'i I-'1 La- .i stiim,- -f 1 S tlo fls. MBS while Pitt has 17, and Kclleher 16. KSQfll other leading batters: Varyan, HBS Wichita. 36a, Shestak. Bt, Joseph, -j$Mk 865; Beck, Wichita 846; Coffey. lies jBl: Moines, .34 4; Levlvelt, Omaha. .343, l Pitt. Oklahoma City, .333, Platte. Ijr iu, aha, 332, Crosby, St Joseph, .332. TOO MANY HITS, III AVERS 1, John McGraw, always a lover of air tight pitching, Is having a lot of fun, SBj these days shooting sarcasm at the 3HHB magnates of both major leagues who MfB - were instrumental in having the freak' IfraBlVj pitching deliveries abolished. The; BBHBi Clam boss says there Is entirely too jSHB 4 much hitting in the major!!; this season KBW and that before the campaign ends In Kf3BV ! 'he fall faiidorn will be so sick and tired of seeing home I una. triples and; 1 I doubles made they wont care whether HI jf -J Lhey ever see another ball game. Sfl S "I hope those magnates who were, Sflil" so eager to kill off the freak deliveries KBIijH are beginning to see, the error of their1 Vf i ruling," said McGraw "I like to nee Kftg hitting as well an the next one, hut the; If number of heavy hltfl thai are being' U registered thia season shown plalnl) DSbVt I ' the iii ofl 111 11 to lias Hniuiwr too far In HB) I J 'he other direction and the grand old' BB I game Is going to suffer as a result. ' BjBJ B McGraw contends that of the two, BBBI H evils, the fan prefers less hitting and B9I more airtight pitching. He admits that BJT-Hb fans do like to sec a rampage of hit- BBsB ting occasionally, but that too many BBB hits make for loose play and has a BBS derided tendency to klrl Interest In the BJBJiw sport One or two big score games In Bfll a season la sufficient, according to Mc- BHB O raw. HY MiGraw declared recently that the BBjl .ibolishment of freak pitching has rJBBI placed the poor hitter almost on a par Bfl B w ith the good hitter. He says come HB players are making good a.s hitters now BBXji ! who nevi.r could have held a major BsH H league Job last season or at any time SB; ml before the hurlers were restricted. Al- BBPl ' though he did not go state, his speech BC B ! taken to indicate that he will op-1 BBB K pose the rule against freak deliveries' BBW before another campaign opens. PC!f I don t care particularly about the MB : pub. ill." H ild McGraw. " but 1 eon- PjVjVJllI I fess that I run unable to see the harm LMl ft in 11 player rubbing in the dirt, or even j SnBI L I placing a little rosin on it Such prac- nBBI & J lice as thp:i are absolutely harmless, uBB et they give the pitcher a chance BJj I lo gt a firm hold on the bnll and rn- BBfl Ifrf able him to throw some curves he ItttfB eannot ever attempt with a smooth MH y ball, it's wrong, thia total abollsh- VK&l tnent, and the magnates will see It be - ! ' lure the season has Closed " I UK IN j OLYMPIC EVENT1 i Alma Richards Takes High; Jump and Also 16-Pound Shot Put NEW YfiP.K. July LO. Everett L. j Bradley, of the University of Kansas, I w ho iiaMfled In third place in the I pentathlon tryouts last Saturday, led1 the ioint winners today when half t li . -'decathlon everts had been completed in the Olympic tryouti" at Travers Is land. The competition will bo con- j eluded there tomorow. In addition to; i the remaining five contests on ihe iie- cathlon program there Will be final trouto In the 3.000 meter steeple chase, and 10,000 meter walk. In today's tests, A W Richards for-' mer Cornell man and Olympic high inmp champion, representing the 1 iien a A., of Ogden Utah, was Hrst in the high Jump with s.x feel 2 inches and also In the 16 pound shot put Srttb forty feet, 3 inches. itobert iegendre of Georgetown University, won the broad Jump with I .'l feet, 7 1-2 Inches Bradlc being second with 21 feel, five inches. Wll- iam fount, of 1. os Angeles. Calif.; won the 400 meter run in h2 8-5 sec-i onds and the LOO meter dash resulted I in a triple tie for first honors between Bradley, Kegendr and Yount. each! Of whom ran the distance In 11 1-6 1 seconds. I Nineteen men smarted and only two! Of Lheafl drODDed out today The names of the ten highest scorers with their Official awards of points follow. Everett L Bradley, University of Kansas ,'t7?4.109. Uobert Legendre, Georgetown Uni versity, 8681.888. brutus Hamilton, University of Mis souri 359' 027 Kverett IOllis, Syracuse University, 347C.a36. A. W. Richards. Ogden A V 3 17.. -747. Harry Coelltz. Ilinols A ., Chicago, 84(10 0H3. William Yount, l.os Angeles X. C . 34 1 y.T66. Lieut. EL L. Videl, r s army, 3353 - 4 60. Leon Perrlne. University of Idaho 330.' 1 1 W, i'. Bartels, i niversltj of Pennsyl vania, 3 1" y i B86. BOXING II NEED OF UPLIFT, CLAIM Board Hopes lo Bring About Change in Conditions Affecting This Sport The army. na n ml civilian board t of boxing control is planning to elim inate the boxer who gains his fistic : education entirely In the school of ex perience, in favor of the lad who ac quires h'.s first knowledge of the spoit as an amateur This is according to a recent unofficial statement from one high up In the counsels of the self appointed body of the ring g:ime i The contention has been for years thai boxing needed uplift, it has been charged b the besi ft lends of the Sport that Ico manv fighters b-arne.l their trade in the back rooms of saloons and not enough youngsters tooi up the p.isiime as amateurs so that they could advance to the profes sional class via easy stages, and thus bring some prestige to the spoit According to the plan said to have ; been adopted by the national body : those fighters who have taken up tlu game because It offers a primrose path in fame and fortune are doomed to 1 disappointment, Future fighters are going to be required to have more than acknowledge boxing, and this j In the hope that the general tone of I the gams may change. tieorge Dlxoh, Jon Wolcott, Terry M Govern. Stanley Ketchel Billy Pap- ke, and others of the stars of a few years back would be back numbers , Indeed with the new organisation. They are appreciated for what thev ; accomplished In flstlana, but because I of their lack of education and the lack of refinement in some of them. the , assisted unintentionally of course to place i be game In bad jepute In cer I tain sections by their conduct after buttles. The new order will not be alarming to I hose fullowera of the game who have been Intimately identified with 'the boxing movement among those clubs fostering the amateur Idea They , point with pride to the fact thut Jiin Corbett, Bob Kitzsimmons, Jm k Mc lullffe, Lea Darcy, Charley Mitchell, M n '.-iis. and a host of oilier clever lads, graduated from the amateur ranks, and each won fame and for I lone although they did not In (.y,-r l case retain the fortune part The wonderful impetus given to the boxing game during the war has created new interest in the amateur , Idea. It is predicted thai next fall practically every athletic elub In the ! country wdll install a boxing class oo The African ostrich is the largest of all living birds. ! I WEE EE 5AYS I jf9k vSrw l ve rrle'' but fnr the lifo of mo ( VKy V, 1 1 boneally cannot 1 See where'bouts the fun cornea in ust Pushing round the shot. . . J j This news eomes bubbling o'er the ' wire To set the sporting world on fire George Slsler makes his hundredth hit And Cobb declares he's going to quit Probably these two Items of news had no connection. The Georgia Peach Isn'f going to quit baseball Just because Staler of the Browns, la the flrsl big leaguer to make centur of bingles this sea-son. But it is interesting to note that Cobb's announcement of his probable retirement and Slsler s fnt ame on the same doy last week. Cobb was hadiy hurt early '.ast month In a collision with Plagstead Tendon- in his knee were "pulled" ami thej are slow m recovering Ty without a pair of perfect knees, is like apple pie without cheese There's n rln mc for ou If Cobb eannot run and slide as he USed to it is not surprising that he should plan to leave the game wdth his glorious record untarnished the record of being the greatest player, past or present, the game has eser knuw n f m Cobb, without the power to run and take chances, Is Cobb no longer, and he tcali;;es that as well as anyone It Seattle Blanks Oaks In Peppery Contest SKATTI P.. July lo By trimming the Oaks here yesterday the bu lls 'made It four straight over the Bay City stars, the count being 4 to 0. Oardner, former Oak. twirled for Seattle 'ml allowed his former mates I but two hits Th score R H K Oakland . . .0 2 s Seattle . 4 13 I Batteries; ltoiiing and Mit.e, Gard ! ner ami Baldwin- Fittery Loses Hard j Fought Tilt to Seals I SAN FRANC1SCOI Jnlv 10. The I Seabi won their third straight g.ime I from the Sacs here yesterday G to 3. A rally In the eighth Inning put the game on Ice for the Seals three runs 'seining breaking the deadlock. Fit- ( tery on the slab out pitched Couch in every Inning but his support was I ragged. The score: R. H E. Sacramento 3 11! 4 3a n Francisco 5 s 2 1 Batteries Fittery and Cady: Couch I and Velle. Milton's works are believed to have otcn influenced by the great Dutch poet: .looat van del Vogel. Is S marvel that he has gone us fai as he has without serious Injury, fori be has always been a player of daring, B taker of desperate chances ... 1 in ract. it has been his fearlessness and not his personality which has made him a popular idol on the ball, field He has scored hundreds of runs In his career by doing things which other players do not venture to do. Fie has plaed baseball fearless ly all his life, he has played to win ball games every mlnut played with, his eves wide open for eveiy chance. That's the kind of ball player thej fang like tb see. and thai Is why thei Detroit Tlgei.. have always been a great attraction i" 'i" American league, no matter where they stood In the pennant race , . . So the retirement of Cobb if It .omPS now or later wil bo a loan to baseball and a thing regretted by ev BD lover of Ihe game. Stirs Ilk him appear seldom and bn-ball needs them. Who knows perhaps Sisler is to he the man to take Cobb's place as 1 he j outstanding, predominant hero of the Earns. Even Babe Ruth, with all his home runs cannOI hope to over shadow a player who can display t:e agllltv and daring of a Cobb on the. ball field. I Pitchers are still complaining about 1 jlhe handicap Imposed upon them by j the nntl-fteak rules, some of which I I Stem to be Juat. others don't, i Doctoring the cover of a ball by 'such substances as rosin and emery to make It do strange Irlcke, doesn't fii Into the grand old pastime some how. On the other hand, the spltbali slab bers seem to he more Justified. It Is I natural to spit In one's glove or to I moisten the fingers while handling a i ball. 1 So doubt some of the pitchers this :.iir ate springing the new rule alibi" ! stuff because they aren't proving ef ' iccllve. but there are some who really are being hit badly. Less complaining . :nl more effort to make their breaks I In pitching would get better results Pacific Coast League Standing of Tcnina. Won I-ost Pet I Salt Lake 56 3S .591 Vernon 66 4- .571 I Los Angeles H 42 o53 San Francisco 49 4 1 o27 Portland 48 43 . 500 I Seattle 40 52 .435 j Oakland 4o F.7 .12 j Sacramento 3s 55 .409 Yesterday Results, Salt Lake 11. Los Angeles 0. Portland 8, ernon, 1 San Francisco 5, Sn ramenio 3. j Seattle 4, Oakland 0. The Serb s, j Sill Lake 8 at Los Angeles 1. Vernon 2 at Portland 2. Sacramento 1 at San Fiancisoo i. Oakland 0 at Seattle Pew Of Ihe forelfcn -'ibstance pitch-! era hao retained their effectiveness because they haven't tried hard enough to pitch the curves and shoots. The saliva ball Is hoi objections! to either the club owners or the base ball, and it would not be surprising to see the bun lifted on It before an other year rolls round. Small scores are not infrequent this season. 'Rip'' i""o)lins. thb Yankee collegian, held the Ited Sox ruhlei 1 and gave them one scratchy hit ihe other day. And then Walter Johnson the Great comes right back at the Boston boys and hurls a no-hlt no-Hln game lagalnst them. Por 14 years Walter has been living to do this little thing. So you see wo atlll have good pitching without letting the freakj mar the pastime Bees Again Blank j Angel Crew, 11 to 0 I LOS ANGELES July 10. Salt Lake again whitewashed the locals here yesterday winning by a score of 11 t 0. Cullop On the Slab f":- the Bees twirled air tight ball and allowed the 'locals, but six hits The Angels have now gone 86 Innings minus a tally In the present series The all around hitting ability of the Bees enabled them to plant the game on Ice In the second spasm they chased five scores over the platter which was enough to win most any ball game The score 11. II. E. Salt Lake 11 12 2 Los Angeles 0 6 4 Batteries Cullop and Byler, Per tlca Hughes and Basaler. Portland Kids Win Over Tier Stars PORTLAND, July 10. McCredle'a Kids evened the series hero yesterday when they trounced the Tigers 3 to 1 I In a peppery game. The locals ehar 1 tend three runs In the first two in Inlngs which proved to be enough to w in The core: 11. 1 1 E I Vernon 1 8 1 Portland 3 It 0 Batteries: Mitchell and DeVormet , 1 Hazier and Tohln. Change Sailing Plans I of Olympic Athletes NEW rORK, July 9. Changes in the plans of the silling of the Am- rl I Can Olympic team were announced here today by Ph.. idem Klrby of the Olympic committee. Under the re. arranged schedule seve--.il hundred athletes will leave here about July 26 jand arrive at Antwerp about August I It originally was planned for the team to sail on July 20 on the United States army transport Northern Paci fic. Thai vessel however, will be sent to dry dock soon. on Pepper Is the product of unripe ber Ifles Of a tropical shrub. IsTARVAULTERS j! I TOUCH THE SKYj I 1 Two stars stand out as the best I polevaulters in the country' They are Prank K Foss holder of the world's record, 13 feet 'J lfi Inches aud E E Myers of Dartmouth M era has done 13 feet and ir. said to have the mom perfeel form m vault ing. He sails over the high bar wlth : 011 1 apparent effort. In iho recent I tryouts Foss did not have to extend himself and leaped but 13 feet at 1 Chicago with Myers winning at Phil adelphia with 12 feet 9 In. It will be u pretty battle when this pair scrape hi ;.., - at Harvard stadium in the rinal 1 rials on July 17. The above I picture shows the Dartmouth man .opping the lathe ! no American Association MILWAUKEE, July 9 Score: n h e. j Louisville 16 19 0 1 Milwaukee .... 9 16 7 , Batteries: Decatur, Tatum, Wright and Meyer; Relnhart, McWheeney, TrentmaM and tjaston. Huhn. I KANSAS CITV, Juh 9. Score: K. 11. E. I Indianapolis 10 10 1 Kansas City 4 9 2 naileries Petty, Cavet and Hen line. Bolden, lore. Letter and Swee ney MINNEAPOLIS, July 3. Score. R. H E. Columbus 5 9 l Minneapolis 2 9 1 Batteries Dan forth and Kcliey; I Itobertson and Mayer, ciwens. ST. PAUL. Minn . July 9. Score: R, II E. Toledo 3 y 3 Eft. Paul 0 7 3 Batteries; Dtabuc, Stryker and. Mur phy, Merrit, Hail and Margrave. 00 - CHESS PLYERS TIED FOR LEAD IN CONTEST ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.. July 10. Stasch Mldtkowskl of Los Angeles, and Charles Jaffe of New York, tied ; foi the lead In the muster chess tour nament here, when MlOtkowski won I his adjourned game with tieorge Neldllch of Cornell university. T. Sharp Ol Philadelphia, defeated E S Jackson of Philadelphia In their ad journed game Tho score: Jaffe and MIotkowskI, one and one half games; F. J. Marshall, Cnlted Stales champion Neldltoh and Sharp, one each, Jackson, none. SCHEDULED FIGHT IS HELD UP BY ROW PORTLAND, ire.. July 10. Mike O'Dowd, champion middleweight, and Battling Ortega filled to fight their scheduled ten-round match at Milwaukee pavilion issl night After the crowd had gathered, .miiounce n in was made from the ring that the match was off owing to a dlsagree 1 ment over selection of Q referee. AMERICAN LEAGUE stmiding of Xoams. Won Lost Pet. j Cleveland 49 .602, New York . .011 J9 .633 , Chicago IS 2! Washington 36 .13 .'22 Boston 3.. 36 493 1 St. Loulu r, 39 173 Detroit 23 48 . 324 Philadelphia 2 1 .XS'J Yesterday's Results. Cleveland at VVaahlngton . l hlcaRO 4 at Phils del pb 'a Detroit 3 at New York 9. St. Louin 1 at Boston 2 YANKS HIT HARD ! BEATING DETROIT Bush Pitches Boston Ameri-j cans to 2 to 1 Victory Over St. Louis Ball Team NEW YORK. July 9. New Yort defeated Heiroii ioda. 9 I" 3 The Yankee- resumed then haul hitting while Qulnn proved a pUSSle to the Tigern P.abe Ruth was presented with a diamond studded K of C fob by loil Knights Of ColumbUS and in 'he fifth Inning hit his twenty-fifth borne run ,,f ih season the bail going Into the upper right field stand Score. Detroit 001 000 00-' 1 E 0 Sew York . . 004 113 0x 9 II 4 Batteries: Oldham nd Ainsmith; Quliiii and Hannah. Hoffman. BoSTuN. Job' 9 Hush pitched noaton to a to 3 victory over Bt. Louts todas the game being featured iv ihe fielding of Gedeon. Scott and McNally. With two out hi the sixth, Jacobsnn doubled and score. 1 cu Wiil- tams single Menoskes and Postei singled and both ecored on Scott'H I single in the seventh Score St Louis 000 001 000 1 10 0 Boston 000 000 '0x I I 0 Batteries. Davis and Severeld Bush and Walter PHILADELPHIA July 9. Chicago outhatted Philadelphia today ,,ul the locals won, 5 to 4. evening lh( series After Wrelch's home run with two on bases In the first and Perkins' homer J In the second. Williams settled down, and but for an error by P.isberg. would have shut out the locals! for the remainder of the game Scon Chbago 000 LOO 003 4 it I Philadelphia 3 10 000 QlX 6 5 1 Batteries: Williams and Schalk; Harris, Perry and Perkins WASHINGTON. July 9 Cleveland took another game from Washington today to 4 The Washington defense grumbled behind Zacherj in ihe sev enth md eighth Innings when the si tors made all their runs Speaker of I the Cleveland club Injured his leg in !thc seventh and retired before the I game ended. Score Cleveland .. ..00" 000 440 8 12 1 Washington . .010 020 100 4 13 t Batteries Caldwell Nb-baus, Bagb.v land O'Neill; Zacher and Ohan Ity 00 PETER CDLEY ; 1 RACE WINNER CLEX'KLANli. July 9. The Ohio1 slake of J5.000 for J OS trotters, ihi 1 feature of the week on the grand cir cuit program at North Randall track, went to an Ohio driver today when Peter Coley, driven bj Charles Vantinel of Columbus, won In three straight heats, all hotl com ml V. I'ulm.nl" ijriM-u by VV. Pv Cox was - second and Peter June, driven b Kd Geers na, third The best time of 2 0 8 i-- wa! made in the second beat Peter COley won the first het In ai Slashing drle from Peter June, took, (he second from K Colorado In a' Stretch sprint and won the third from Golden Spier In a hard drive. Brusllloff, equal favorite In the auc tion betting with Peter Coley, was a keen disappointment to his backers. He was never prominent finishing eighth In the first and third heats and fourth in the second The Tavern slake for 2 1 t i lass trot ters, another $5,000 purse event, WSS won by Alta Donovan, inn en b Tom my Murphy, which took the second and third heats after finishing third In the first. Anon McKinney, driven I 1. Krsklne was secorid and ESd (Jeers'! Wikl wiki, was third. Best time, - 08 3-4. was made In the second heat The l':08 class trot went to Walnut Frisco, when he captured the second and third heuts after finishing Bt to Norman Dillon In the first. All three I were hard fought between Walnut I Prlsco, Norman Dillon and Vllcola, I the loiter finishing second in the set -ond and third heats. Best time ofj 2 II 1-2 was made by Dillon In the, I second heal Kthel Chimes second choice in the' i betting, won the 2:14 class pare In ' straight heats. James Albert, the fav orite, finished second Best time of! I 2.07 3-4 was in the first heat. NATIONAL LEAGUE I Standing of Teams. j Won Lost Pet. Brooklyn 42 32 .668 Cincinnati 39 30 ,B6S Chicago 3tj ..-,20 t- Louis 3'J 37 .513 Pittsburgh SB 34 .so: Boston 30 33 .47 (l Nsw Tork ...jo 3 . 47 I Philadelphia 28 43 .394 r Yesterday's Results. I Philadelphia 4 a: Pittsburgh l. Boston 3 at Incinnatl l New York 2 at Chicago .1, (13 In- tll'l-s-. I i Brooklyn 2-S, at St. Louis 7-0, BASE RUNNING I FEATURE OF GAME I Philadelphia Defeats Pittsburg First Time This Season By Snappy Playng PiTTSBUBOH, July I. Philadel- phis defeated Pittsburgh the first time tblx reason 4 lo 1 today Rlxey pitching H airtight ball with men on bases. The J i hitting of Paulette and Wiightstonc I with d.niiijr bas.- running aided In th f victory. Score: Philadelphia .. 100 con 1QZ 4 2 I Pittsburgh .. ..000 010 000 1 9 1 Batteries Rizey nnd Withero , H i "a rlsnn a ml Schmidt. i n iSSSSSSSI Cincinnati July . IBoston won the flrsl name of their series from Cincin nati today ?, to 1 by bunching two singles and a double with a base on balls in the seventh. The P.eds e- I caped a shut out In the fourth when Dauberl doubled and scored on a sin- gle by Roush. Si "re if Boston 000 000 300 3 0 0 1 (.'Incinnatl . .000 LOO 000 1 5 H Batterls: McQuillan; and Gowdy Ru t her a nd Wlngo. ST LOUIS, July ?t. Brooklvn and j ai i mii ,a...i .. Ja.iKIa u. .i... tA. rSBS di. ih locals pounding two pitchers (or in SS83 S to -' victory In the fir.O H game and losing the second to Brooklyn could do nothing with If Si hupp lii the first contest but in thB sei 1'inl Mamoux held the locals help- Less but one ntau reaching third, and L aided materially toward winning his j own game with two hits. Seore: 1 First game: Brooklyn .. 001 100 000 -1 7 l St. Louis no.' J10 lox 7 1 3 I Batteries: Cadore, Miijus and Krue- ger, Schupp aud demons. Second game. t Brooklyn ...000 401 210 s 10 2 St Louis . . 000 000 000 0 4 Batteries: Mamaux and miller; El- r liott: Haines Kline and CleJOBOha CHICAGO, July S. Barber's single ended a thirteen inning game Which Chicago won from New York 3 to 2 to il. The winning hit followed Twom- biey's single Hollocher's sacraflce. I (Terry's out and an Intentional pass to 'Itobertson. Alexander and Barne worked all the way and 11 would ha been Alexander's gams In nine Innings j ! but for Hollocher s error In the se nth. Manager McGraw has suspend- I cd Pitcher Douglas Indefinitely foS I failure to keep In condition. Score N Y 000 000 200 000 0 2 1 Chicago, oio ooo 100 coi o 3 12 3 i:.. 11. Ties Dames and Smith. Snyd- er; Alexander and Killefer. JOHNSON OF CALIFORNIA WINNER AT TENNi'S IfiASTBOUBNB, Bng . July 10. I William m Johnston of California, and j William T Tlldcn, of Philadelphia, were victorious In the first of the Davis cup elimination singles matches H hers yesterdaj Johnston defeating the j French champion Audio H, Gobert, while Tllden took the measure 01 Wil liam 11 LaursntSi of Prance, bit of the seven sets played In the H two matches the Americans dropped onlj one The greatest thrill of the da came with Oobert's recoveries in the second set. when Johnston led. four lo one. ami luter at 5 to 3 Gobeit sot in magnificent volleying and lH smashing in the ninth and 1 .it 1 1 games and played heroically against the Smashes Of ihe American champion, who was In excellent form. Laurenta appeared to much better advantage than In the recent chain- n ship matohes Si Wimbledon. ilr seemed lo revel In the low hound?. u hlle his volleying was exceptionally Cl'lsp. At the not he frequently cut many of Tllden's brilliant drives to lh lines. Ills struggle with the lH American was far keener and more equally contested than the score re- eals Generally It was Tllden's re- IH turns tiiat gave America another mc- IH All local experts Sgrss that such wonderful tennis has never been seen bore before 11 IRLEY IN RFI 1 INC INN ATI When Pat Moran annexed Chick' Ilarlev to his ball . luii he bolstered up the drawing powers of the Reds The great foot ball star is an outfielder : 00 BBBBBbI The earliest known tunnels are those under the pyramids SAY POP Ambrose Would Outrun His Shadow By C. M. Payne 1 i " 1 j WOOLX SeiCAK . UP BC-HinD VA f W s AM" SAS S j X ) Bow-wow Os L I iAooL'pjTy 1 I ) Couldn't -MP Aid 7 I m SA V " BM 1" I . 1 1 I v Mh saV BoW K I -Bot IT) "B IH J V 3A1D WOWH